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The Oregonian

The Oregonian is a daily newspaper based in Portland, Oregon, United States, owned by Advance Publications. It is the oldest continuously published newspaper on the U.S. West Coast,[7] founded as a weekly by Thomas J. Dryer on December 4, 1850, and published daily since 1861. It is the largest newspaper in Oregon and the second largest in the Pacific Northwest by circulation. It is one of the few newspapers with a statewide focus in the United States.[7][8] The Sunday edition is published under the title The Sunday Oregonian. The regular edition was published under the title The Morning Oregonian from 1861 until 1937.[9]

The Oregonian
TypeDaily newspaper
FormatTabloid (since April 2, 2014)
Owner(s)Advance Publications[1]
PublisherOregonian Media Group[2][3]
EditorTherese Bottomly[4]
Staff writers288/75 (full-time/part-time)[5]
Founded1850
Headquarters1500 S.W. First Avenue[6]
Portland, Oregon 97201, United States
CirculationSunday 156,184,

Saturday 77,035

Wed and Fri 91,827
ISSN8750-1317
Websitewww.OregonLive.com

The Oregonian received the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service, the only gold medal annually awarded by the organization.[10] The paper's staff or individual writers have received seven other Pulitzer Prizes, most recently the award for Editorial Writing in 2014.[11]

The Oregonian is home-delivered throughout Multnomah, Washington, Clackamas, and Yamhill counties in Oregon and Clark County, Washington four days a week (Wednesday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday); it is also home-delivered in parts of Marion and Columbia counties.[12] Although some independent dealers do deliver the newspaper outside that area, in 2006 it ceased to be available in far Eastern Oregon and the southern Oregon Coast and, starting in December 2008, "increasing newsprint and distribution costs" caused the paper to stop delivery to all areas south of Albany.[13]

History

 
Ramage press used to print the first Oregonian
 
First steam press used by the Oregonian, installed in 1862 (more than a year after the advent of a daily edition), and used until 1871. Subsequently, used by the Hillsboro Argus until at least 1911.[14]

Establishment

One year prior to the incorporation of the tiny town of Portland, Oregon, in 1851, prospective leaders of the new community determined to establish a local newspaper—an institution which was seen as a prerequisite for urban growth.[15] Chief among these pioneer community organizers seeking establishment of a Portland press were Col. W.W. Chapman and prominent local businessman Henry W. Corbett.[15] In the fall of 1850, Chapman and Corbett traveled to San Francisco, at the time far and away the largest city on the west coast of the United States, in search of an editor interested in and capable of producing a weekly newspaper in Portland.[15] There the pair met Thomas J. Dryer, a transplanted New Yorker who was an energetic writer with both printing equipment and previous experience in the production of a small circulation community newspaper in his native Ulster County, New York.[15]

First weekly issues

 
The Weekly Oregonian front page on March 19, 1859

Dryer's press was transported to Portland and it was there on December 4, 1850, that the first issue of The Weekly Oregonian found its readers.[16] Each weekly issue consisted of four pages, printed six columns wide.[16] Little attention was paid to current news events, with the bulk of the paper's content devoted to political themes and biographical commentary.[16] The paper took a staunch political line supportive of the Whig Party—an orientation which soon brought it into conflict with The Statesman, a Democratic paper launched at Oregon City not long after The Weekly Oregonian's debut.[16] A loud and bitter rivalry between the competing news organs ensued.[16]

1860s–1870s

Pittock era

Henry Pittock became the owner in 1861 as compensation for unpaid wages, and he began publishing the paper daily, except Sundays.[17] Pittock's goal was to focus more on news than the bully pulpit established by Dryer.[18] He ordered a new press in December 1860 and also arranged for the news to be sent by telegraph to Redding, California, then by stagecoach to Jacksonville, Oregon, and then by pony express to Portland.[18]

Scott era

 
Harvey W. Scott as he appeared in the 1870s.

From 1866 to 1872 Harvey W. Scott was the editor.[19] Henry W. Corbett bought the paper from a cash-poor Pittock in October 1872 and placed William Lair Hill as editor.[18] Scott, fired by Corbett for supporting Ben Holladay's candidates, became editor of Holladay's rival Portland Daily Bulletin.[18] The paper went out of print in 1876, Holladay having lost $200,000 in the process.[18] Corbett sold The Oregonian back to Pittock in 1877, marking a return of Scott to the paper's editorial helm.[18] A part-owner of the paper, Scott would remain as editor-in-chief until shortly before his death in 1910.[20]

1880s–1890s

One of the journalists who began his career on The Oregonian during this time period was James J. Montague who took over and wrote the column "Slings & Arrows" until he was hired away by William Randolph Hearst in 1902.[21] In this time period Governor Sylvester Pennoyer prominently criticized the Oregonian for calling for vigilante "justice" against Chinese Americans (Pennoyer favored running people of Chinese descent out of the state by "legal" means).[22] The West Shore criticized the Oregonian for its sensationalized coverage of the English monarchy.[23]

Sunday Oregonian

In 1881, the first Sunday Oregonian was published.[24] The paper became known as the voice of business-oriented Republicans, as evidenced by consistent endorsement of Republican candidates for president in every federal election before 1992.

New location

 
The Oregonian Building of 1892 was the paper's home until 1948. It was demolished in 1950.

The paper's offices and presses were originally housed in a two-story building at the intersection of First Street (now First Avenue) and Morrison Street, but in 1892 the paper moved into a new nine-story building at 6th and Alder streets.[24] The new building was, the same as its predecessor (and successor), called the Oregonian Building. It included a clock tower at one corner, and the building's overall height of 194[25] to 196[26] feet (around 59 m) made it the tallest structure in Portland, a distinction it retained until the completion of the Yeon Building in 1911.[26] It contained about 100,000 square feet (9,300 m2) of floor space, including the basement but not the tower.[25] The newspaper did not move again until 1948. The 1892 building was demolished in 1950.[27]

1900s–1940s

 
The Morning Oregonian, January 22, 1912

Following the death of Harvey Scott in 1910, the paper's editor-in-chief was Edgar B. Piper, who had previously been managing editor.[28] Piper remained editor until his death in 1928.

The Oregonian's first female journalist, Louise Bryant, joined the paper around 1909.[29]

The Morning Oregonian and KGW

In 1922, the Oregonian discontinued its weekly edition,[30] and launched KGW, Oregon's first commercial radio station. Five years later, KGW affiliated with NBC (1927). The newspaper purchased a second station, KEX, in 1933,[31] from NBC subsidiary Northwest Broadcasting Co. In 1944, KEX was sold to Westinghouse Radio Stations, Inc. The Oregonian launched KGW-FM, the Northwest's first FM station,[32] in 1946 (acclaimed by "The Oregonian" May 8, 1946), known today as KKRZ. KGW and KGW-FM were sold to King Broadcasting Co in 1953.

In 1937, The Morning Oregonian shortened its name to The Oregonian. Two years later, associate editor Ronald G. Callvert received a Pulitzer Prize for editorial reporting for "distinguished editorial writing...as exemplified by the editorial entitled "My Country 'Tis of Thee".[33]

A 20-year trust under which the Oregonian was conducted expired in 1939. O. L. Price, who managed the newspaper under the trust, retired at age 61 upon its expiration. Ownership reverted to the heirs of Pittock and H. W. Scott.[34]

Move in 1948

 
Postcard of the new home of The Oregonian, corner of 6th & Jefferson

In 1948, the paper moved to a new location within downtown, where its headquarters ultimately would remain for the next 66 years, on SW Broadway between Jefferson Street and Columbia Street. The new building was designed by Pietro Belluschi and again was named the Oregonian Building.[24] The block was previously home to the William S. Ladd mansion, which had been demolished around 1925.[18] Circa 1946, The Oregonian purchased the block for $100,000, which led to complaints from paper editor Leslie M. Scott because of the outrageous price.[18] Three years later, Scott purchased a nearby block for the state at $300,000 while holding the office of Oregon State Treasurer.[18]

The new Oregonian building was to contain the KGW radio station and a television studio, as well as a large and opulent dining room.[18] The contractor was L. H. Hoffman, who was under a very profitable cost-plus contract.[18] Aside from the "extravagance of design", construction materials in short supply, the nation was under heavy inflation, and Belluschi's plans were never ready, leading to massive costs.[18] The Oregonian had to borrow from banks, the first time in over 50 years.[18] New company president E. B. MacNaughton was forced to exhaust the company's loan limits at First National Bank, then turn to the Bank of America.[18] MacNaughton then eliminated an extra elevator, the dining room, and KGW's radio and television studios.[18] The building still cost $4 million, twice the original estimate.[18]

The building opened in 1948, but The Oregonian had to sell it to Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company for $3.6 million in a leaseback arrangement.[18] Further financial issues led to the 1950 sale to Samuel Newhouse.[18]

1950s–1960s

In 1950, Advance Publications founder S. I. "Si" Newhouse purchased the paper.[35] At that time, the sale price of $5.6 million was the largest for a single newspaper.[36] The sale was announced on December 11, 1950.[18] In 1954, Newhouse bought 50% of Mount Hood Radio & Television Broadcasting Corp, which broadcasts KOIN-TV, Portland's first VHF television station, KOIN AM (now KUFO), and KOIN-FM (now KXL-FM). The Oregonian's circulation in 1950 was 214,916; that of the rival Oregon Journal was 190,844.[37]

In 1957, staff writers William Lambert and Wallace Turner were awarded that year's Pulitzer Prize for Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting - No Edition time.[38] Their prize cited "their expose of vice and corruption in Portland involving some municipal officials and officers of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of America, Western Conference" and noted that "they fulfilled their assignments despite great handicaps and the risk of reprisal from lawless elements."[38]

The Oregon Journal

What was to become a long and heated strike began against both The Oregonian and The Oregon Journal began in November 1959.[39] The strike was called by Stereotypers Local 49 over various contract issues, particularly the introduction of more automated plate-casting machinery;[40] the new-to-American-publishing German-made equipment required one operator instead of the four that operated the existing equipment.[39] Wallace Turner and many other writers and photographers refused to cross the picket lines and never returned.[41] The two newspapers published a "joint, typo-marred paper" for six months until they had hired enough nonunion help to resume separate operations.[40] Starting in February 1960, striking union workers published a daily newspaper, The (Portland) Reporter;[7] its circulation peaked at 78,000, but was shut down in October 1964.[42]

In 1961, Newhouse bought The Oregon Journal, Portland's afternoon daily newspaper.[43] Production and business operations of the two newspapers were consolidated in The Oregonian's building, while their editorial staffs remained separate.[44] The National Labor Relations Board ruled the strike illegal in November 1963.[7] Strikers continued to picket until April 4, 1965,[41] at which point the two newspapers became open shops.

Late 1960s–early 1980s

In 1967, Fred Stickel came to The Oregonian from New Jersey to become general manager of the paper; he became president in 1972 and publisher in 1975.[45]

As part of a larger corporate plan to exit broadcasting, The Oregonian sold KOIN-TV to newspaper owner Lee Enterprises in 1977.[46] At the same time, KOIN-AM and -FM were sold to Gaylord Broadcasting Co. Since S. I. Newhouse died in 1979, S.I. Jr. has managed the magazines, and Donald oversees the newspapers.

The Oregonian lost its primary "competitor" and Portland became a one-daily-newspaper city in 1982, when Advance/Newhouse shut down the Journal, citing declining advertising revenues.[citation needed]

1985

The Oregonian published a twenty-part series on the Rajneeshpuram, a religious community that established itself in Antelope, Oregon.[47]

Late 1980s

Hilliard era

William A. Hilliard was named editor in 1987, and was the paper's first African-American editor.[48] A resident of Oregon since the age of 8, Hilliard had already worked at The Oregonian for 35 years; he had been city editor starting in 1971 and executive editor since 1982.[49]

1989

The Oregonian established an Asia bureau in Tokyo, Japan in 1989.[50]

Also in 1989, The Oregonian endorsed a Democratic candidate for president for the first time in its history when it supported Bill Clinton in 1992.[51]

1990s

The year 1993 was an eventful year for The Oregonian. Robert M. Landauer, then editorial page editor, was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Editorial Writing for "a bold campaign to defuse myths and prejudice promoted by an anti-homosexual constitutional amendment, which was subsequently defeated", according to the Pulitzer judges. The integrity of The Oregonian became the subject of national coverage when The Washington Post broke the story of inappropriate sexual advances which led to the resignation of Oregon senator Bob Packwood four years later. This prompted some to joke, "If it matters to Oregonians, it's in the Washington Post" (a twist on the Oregonian's slogan "If it matters to Oregonians, it's in The Oregonian).[52] Finally, Newhouse appointed a new editor for the paper, Sandra Rowe, who relocated from The Virginian-Pilot.[53]

Business has everything—power, influence, sex, drama—and our job is to pull back the curtain: That bank merger last week? Who got screwed? Who came out on top? This is what really happened. Business news should be handled as finely crafted drama; it's got substance and great meaning. Business should be the backbone of the newspaper.

— Sandy Rowe, from AJR in 1999[54]

Rowe era

Sandra Rowe joined the paper as executive editor in June 1993.[55] She formally became editor in 1994 with the retirement of William Hilliard, but Hilliard had effectively already given her control of the editor's reins in 1993 as he focused his attention on his duties as the newly elected president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors for 1993–94, in his final year before retirement.[49]

According to Editor & Publisher, soon after Rowe's arrival, she introduced organizational changes to the newsroom. Instead of having a large number of general assignment reporters, she organized them around teams, many of which often develop "subject expertise" that "reflect[s] the interests of readers, not traditional newsroom boundaries."[5] Examples (over the years) include "Northwest Issues and Environment", "Living In the '90s"/"How We Live", "Politics and Accountability", "Health, Science, and Medicine", "Sustainability and Growth", and "Higher Education".[5][56] Accompanying the reorganization was a more bottom-up approach to identifying stories: "instead of having an assignment-driven newspaper, you have the beat reporters coming to editors with what is going on", with the team editors responsible for deciding what stories were covered by their teams.[5]

The position of public editor was established at The Oregonian in 1993, and Robert Caldwell was appointed.[57] Michele McLellan assumed the role three years later, and was delegated the authority to decide whether or not a newspaper error should result in the publication of a correction.[58]

Pulitzer Prize

Staff writer Richard Read won the 1999 Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting, for a series, The French Fry Connection.[59] The articles illustrated the impact of the 1997 Asian financial crisis by following a case of french fries from a Washington-state farm to a McDonald's in Singapore, ending in Indonesia during riots that led to the Fall of Suharto. The newsroom celebrated The Oregonian's first Pulitzer in 42 years with champagne, McDonald's french fries and a brass band. The series also received the Overseas Press Club award for best business reporting from abroad, the Scripps Howard Foundation award for business reporting and the Blethen award for enterprise reporting.[60][61]

Co-worker Tom Hallman Jr. was a finalist for the 1999 Pulitzer Prize in Feature Writing, for his "unique profile of a man struggling to recover from a brain injury". Reporter Mark O'Keefe won an Overseas Press Club award for human rights reporting. The editors of Columbia Journalism Review recognized The Oregonian as number twelve on its list of "America's Best Newspapers", and the best newspaper owned by the Newhouse family.

2000s

In 2000, The Oregonian was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Reporting for its coverage of an environmental disaster created when the New Carissa, a freighter that carried nearly 400,000 gallons of heavy fuel, ran aground February 4, 1999, north of Coos Bay, Oregon. The articles detailed "how fumbling efforts of official agencies failed to contain the far-reaching damage", according to the Pulitzer jury. That same year reporters Brent Walth[62] and Alex Pulaski[63] were finalists for the Pulitzer Prize in Explanatory Writing for their series on political influences in pesticide regulation.

Pulitzer Prize for Public Service

The Oregonian and news staff were acknowledged with two Pulitzer Prizes in 2001. The paper was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service,[64] for its "detailed and unflinching examination of systematic problems within the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, including harsh treatment of foreign nationals and other widespread abuses, which prompted various reforms." The series was reported and written by Kim Christensen,[65] Richard Read, Julie Sullivan-Springhetti[66] and Brent Walth,[62] with editorials by the editorial board.

Staff writer Tom Hallman Jr. received the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for Feature Writing[67] for his series, The Boy Behind the Mask, on a teen with a facial deformity.

In 2003, music critic David Stabler was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Feature Writing for "his sensitive, sometimes surprising chronicle of a teenage prodigy's struggle with a musical talent that proved to be both a gift and a problem". Michael Arrieta-Walden became public editor in 2003; when he ended his three-year term in the position, no successor was named.[68]

 
The Oregonian Building of 1948, which occupies a full city block in downtown Portland, housed the paper's headquarters from 1948 to 2014.

2004 criticism

In 2004 the paper faced criticism after a headline characterized a 1970s sexual relationship between then-mayor Neil Goldschmidt and a 14-year-old girl as an "affair", rather than statutory rape.[69][70][71]

The paper endorsed a Democrat for president for the second time in its 150-year history when it backed John Kerry for president in 2004.[51]

2005–2006

In 2005, staff reporters Steve Suo and Erin Hoover Barnett were finalists for the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting for "their groundbreaking reports on the failure to curtail the growing illicit use of methamphetamines". That same year, Americans United for Palestinian Human Rights published two reports on The Oregonian, claiming the paper under-reported Palestinian deaths in its news stories of the Israeli/Palestinian conflict and excluded the Palestinian narrative in its Opinion Pages.[72][73]

Editorial writers Doug Bates and Rick Attig were awarded the 2006 Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing for their editorials on the conditions at the Oregon State Hospital.[74] As of late 2006 and early 2007, the paper's circulation averaged 319,625 for the daily edition and 375,913 for the Sunday edition, giving The Oregonian the 22nd-largest circulation among all major newspapers in the U.S.[75]

2007

In 2007, The Oregonian and its journalists were recognized with several awards. Sports columnist John Canzano was selected as the nation's No. 2 sports columnist in the annual Associated Press Sports Editors Awards. Three Oregonian reporters—Jeff Kosseff, Bryan Denson, and Les Zaitz—were awarded the George Polk Award for national reporting, for their series about the failure of a decades-old, multibillion-dollar, federal program established by the Javits-Wagner-O'Day Act intended to help people with severe disabilities find employment. Instead it "awarded executives handsomely but left disabled workers in segregated jobs often paying less than minimum wage."[76][77]

On April 16, 2007, it was announced that the staff of The Oregonian was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Reporting for their "skillful and tenacious coverage of a family missing in the Oregon mountains, telling the tragic story both in print and online."[78] In addition, the paper's reporters were finalists in two other categories. Les Zaitz, Jeff Kosseff and Bryan Denson were finalists for the Pulitzer for National Reporting for the same series that also won the George Polk Award noted above. Inara Verzemnieks was nominated for the Pulitzer for Feature Writing for "her witty and perceptive portfolio of features on an array of everyday topics", according to the Pulitzer judges.

2008

In February 2008, Editor & Publisher named editor Sandra Mims Rowe and executive editor Peter Bhatia as "Editors of the Year". The trade journal noted that since Rowe and Bhatia arrived in 1993, the paper and its journalists had won five Pulitzer Prizes and had been finalists a further nine times.[5] E&P also cited "an increased focus on specialized reporting; a reorganized newsroom that promotes "team reporting" concepts over traditional beats; and regular training sessions and seminars that most staffers credit for encouraging fresh ideas and competitive approaches."[5] Pulitzer Board member Richard Oppel, the editor of the Austin American-Statesman, called the paper "one of the finest newspapers in the country, easily in the top 10."[5]

On September 28, 2008, the paper distributed a DVD of Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against the West as an advertising supplement for that day's edition,[79] two weeks after The New York Times, The Charlotte Observer and The Miami Herald had done the same thing.[80] The Oregonian did so despite Portland mayor Tom Potter's personal request that publisher Fred Stickel not distribute it because the "tenor of the video contributes towards a climate of distrust towards Muslims", and because the paper's willingness to distribute the DVD bestows upon it "an impression of objectivity and legitimacy it does not deserve."[79] Stickel cited "freedom of speech", and an "obligation to keep our advertising columns as open as possible" as reasons for not rejecting the DVD.[79]

Newsroom staff in 2008 was about the same size as it was in 1993, though there were fifty fewer full-time staff members than there were in 2002; about half of those positions were eliminated after a buyout in late 2007.[5] The paper's outside news bureaus grew from four to six during her tenure.[5]

2009

In 2009, The Oregonian was scooped for a third time on a story of an Oregon politician's sex scandal, this time involving Mayor Sam Adams about what Newsweek called his "public deception and private bad judgment" about his past relationship with a teenage legislative intern.[81] Nigel Jaquiss of Willamette Week broke the story after 18 months of investigations; Jaquiss's reporting on another sex scandal involving Neil Goldschmidt earned Jaquiss a 2005 Pulitzer Prize. Jaquiss thinks The Oregonian's failure to follow up on leads that both he and Oregonian reporters had received was a case of "one-newspaper towns being a little too cozy with local power brokers."[81] A media ethics teacher and consultant for The Poynter Institute for Media Studies suggests that the pattern of failure to cover such stories "may have more to do with the culture at The Oregonian, which has recently "built its reputation on thoughtful, narrative coverage ...[that] doesn't lend itself well to digging up sex scandals."[81]

In August 2009, the paper's owners announced the end of a policy that protected full-time employees from layoffs for economic or technological reasons;[45] the change took effect the following February.[82] In September 2009, publisher Fred Stickel announced his retirement, effective September 18, ending 34 years in the position; his son Patrick, president of the paper, was appointed interim publisher but was not a candidate to succeed his father,[45] and Patrick Stickel retired on December 30, 2009.[83] N. Christian Anderson III was named as the new publisher in October,[84] and began work in the position at the beginning of November 2009.[85] After more than 16 years as editor, Sandra Rowe retired at the end of 2009.[86][87] Peter Bhatia, then executive editor, succeeded her as editor.[86]

2010s

Layoffs of 37 in February 2010 left the paper with a total of about 750 employees, including more than 200 in the news department.[82] In September, the newspaper announced that its "TV Click" was to be replaced by TV Weekly, a publication from the Troy, Michigan-based NTVB Media.[88] Unlike "TV Click", TV Weekly requires a separate subscription fee; The Oregonian is following the example of the Houston Chronicle[89] and other major newspapers and switching to "some form of 'opt in and pay' TV sections (rather than dropping the sections) and have found only about 10 percent to 20 percent of subscribers use the sections."[88]

2013

In 2013, publisher N. Christian Anderson announced the paper was restructuring and that beginning October 1, the Oregonian Publishing Company would be dissolved.[1] Two new companies would be formed: the Oregonian Media Group, which will focus on providing content on its online news site, OregonLive.com though it would continue to publish a daily print edition of the paper; and Advance Central Services Oregon, which would provide production, packaging, and distribution support for the new company. Ownership remained with Advance Publications. Though the paper would be printed seven days a week, home delivery would be cut to four days a week: Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.[1] These changes were put into effect, as scheduled, on October 1.[90] The paper also announced that "significant" layoffs were expected.[1] In addition, Anderson announced that the new company would likely move from its downtown Portland building.[91]

2014–2015

 
A newly redesigned and installed street vending box for The Oregonian (black) after the paper became a tabloid on April 2, 2014, along with a Portland Tribune box (green)
 
The paper's longtime printing plant, in the Goose Hollow neighborhood west of downtown, closed in 2015 after the paper's printing was outsourced. The smaller of the complex's two buildings (pictured) was demolished in late 2018.

On April 2, 2014, the paper switched from broadsheet format to the smaller tabloid format.[92]

On April 14, 2014, it was announced that the paper's editorial staff—consisting of Mark Hester, Erik Lukens, Susan Nielsen, and Len Reed[93]—had won the 2014 Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing, for their coverage of the state of Oregon's public employee retirement system. Reporter Les Zaitz was named as a finalist for Explanatory Reporting for his work on Mexican drug cartels.[11]

Editor Peter Bhatia left the paper in May 2014 to take a teaching position at Arizona State University. In July 2014, it was announced that Mark Katches had been hired as the paper's editor, and would also be the Oregonian Media Group's vice president of content.[94] Also in July 2014, the newspaper moved its headquarters from the building at 1320 SW Broadway that it had occupied since 1948 to a smaller space elsewhere in downtown Portland.[95] The new headquarters takes up around 40,000 sq ft (3,700 m2) of space in the Crown Plaza office building, at 1500 SW First Avenue.[6]

N. Christian Anderson left the Oregonian Media Group in May 2015, to become editor and publisher of The Register-Guard, in Eugene, Oregon.[96] Anderson became publisher of The Oregonian in 2009, subsequently being named president of the Oregonian Media Group when that new company replaced the Oregonian Publishing Company in October 2013, with the title of publisher thereafter no longer being used, and in turn was appointed to the new position of chairman of the group in September 2014.[96] Steve Moss succeeded Anderson as Oregonian Media Group president,[97] and the chairman position was to go unfilled.[96]

In June 2015, Advance signed a contract with Signature Graphics to take over printing and distribution of the paper from Advance Central Services Oregon, and announced that it was considering selling its longtime printing plant located near Providence Park.[98][99] Layoffs of printing-press workers were due to be implemented in August.[99] In February 2017, the Oregonian Publishing Company sold the 41,000-square-foot (3,800 m2) building for $20 million to a development partnership which said it planned to tear it down and build a 23-story apartment building on the site,[100] now known as the Press Blocks.[101] Demolition of the former printing complex began in fall 2018.[102][103]

2016

Moss announced in July 2016 that he would depart at the end of August.[104] In the article about Moss's impending departure, it was disclosed that the newspaper's Sunday circulation was at that time approximately 170,000.[104]

On October 24, 2016, the paper's editorial board announced that it would once again decline to endorse a candidate for President of the United States, a practice it first abandoned in 2012. This decision was criticized by some readers, who wondered why the board would offer endorsements in state elections without also taking a position on the presidential race. The board justified its decision by citing the paper's general focus on local issues, writing "Our goal as an editorial board is to have an impact in our community. And we don't think an endorsement for president would move the needle. So that's why we focus our endorsement energy where voters may not have made up their minds and need help with the decision."[105]

2018

Editor Mark Katches left the company in August 2018, to become editor of the Tampa Bay Times, owned by the non-profit Poynter Institute for Media Studies. Therese Bottomly, who had worked 'The Oregonian since 1983, was named editor and vice president of content in September 2018.[4][106]

2020

Comments section elimination

On January 2, 2020, The Oregonian eliminated the comments section of Oregonlive.com. The paper said it was following the trend of other papers in the past decade and said most readers don't utilize the comments feature. The paper also said uncivil comments were taking up too many resources to moderate.[107]

Paywall

In mid June 2020, the paper started rolling out stories tagged "Exclusive" marking the announcement of upcoming paywall.[108] These "exclusive" contents, usually front-page stories, were made subscribers-only partway through July and starting on July 27, 2020, it has been switched over to paywall and restricted to paid subscribers only.[109]

Targeted publications

The staff of The Oregonian also produces three "targeted publications"—glossy magazines distributed free of charge to 40,000–45,000 wealthy residents of the Portland metropolitan area, and sold on newsstands to 5,000 others. A fourth glossy magazine, Explore the Pearl, is produced in conjunction with the Pearl District Business Association, and mailed to "high-income Portland Metro households" within Lake Oswego, West Linn, Mountain Park, Lakeridge, Forest Heights, Raleigh Hills, Oak Hills, West Hills, Dunthorpe, and Clark County.[110]

Magazine Description Copies
delivered
Target
household income
Website
Explore the Pearl A look at "all of the hot spots—retailers, restaurants and galleries—the Pearl has to offer."[110] 61,000[110] www.explorethepearl.com
Homes+Gardens Northwest "Take[s] you inside real Northwest homes and gardens, where residents and professionals have created spaces perfect for the finest Northwest living"[111] 40,000[111] $120,000 (median)[111]
Mix "Celebrates our fascination with fine food and the casual entertaining that marks the Northwest lifestyle"[112] 40,000[112] $95,000 (median)[112]
Ultimate
Northwest
Captures the "experience of living the good life here in Oregon and the Northwest"[113] 45,000[113] $164,000 (average)[113]

Website

OregonLive.com
TypeWebsite
FormatWeb portal
Owner(s)Advance Publications[114]
PublisherOregonian Media Group[115][116]
EditorTherese Bottomly (Editor and vice president of content)[4]
Staff writers9/26 (editorial/marketing)[citation needed]
Founded1997
Headquarters921 SW Washington
Portland, Oregon 97205
United States
WebsiteOregonLive.com

OregonLive.com is a website covering local news in Oregon and Southwest Washington.[117] The website serves as the online home of The Oregonian.[5] Started in 1997, it is owned by Advance Publications, which also owns The Oregonian.[118] Betsy Richter was the original editor of the website, and served through 1998 when Kevin Cosgrove took over as editor-in-chief.[118]

Oregonian Media Group also publishes the website Here is Oregon.[119]

In addition to content from the affiliated newspapers, OregonLive also uses content from the Associated Press.[118]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Hunsberger, Brett (June 20, 2013). "The Oregonian will go to four-day home delivery". The Oregonian. Retrieved October 6, 2013.
  2. ^ "About Oregonian Media Group (FAQ)". OregonLive.com. June 20, 2013. Retrieved February 16, 2019.
  3. ^ . Oregonian Media Group. Archived from the original on November 12, 2017. Retrieved November 23, 2017.
  4. ^ a b c Manning, Jeff (September 8, 2018) [online date September 7]. "Therese Bottomly named editor". The Oregonian. p. A2. Retrieved October 18, 2018.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j . Editor & Publisher. February 2008. Archived from the original on September 6, 2014. Retrieved January 20, 2012.
  6. ^ a b Njus, Elliott (July 24, 2014). "Oregonian Media Group to move into new downtown offices". The Oregonian. Retrieved September 12, 2014.
  7. ^ a b c d Heinzkill, Richard (August 1993). "A Brief History of Newspaper Publishing in Oregon". University of Oregon Libraries. Retrieved November 22, 2006.
  8. ^ "Our History". Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association. Retrieved February 16, 2019.
  9. ^ "Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861–1937". Historic Oregon Newspapers. University of Oregon. Retrieved December 4, 2018.
  10. ^ "The Oregonian and the Pulitzer Prize". OregonLive. January 10, 2019. from the original on August 16, 2021. Retrieved August 16, 2021.
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Further reading

External links

  •   Media related to The Oregonian at Wikimedia Commons
  • Official website  
  • "The Oregonian". The Oregon Encyclopedia.

oregonian, this, article, about, newspaper, 2011, film, film, other, uses, oregonian, daily, newspaper, based, portland, oregon, united, states, owned, advance, publications, oldest, continuously, published, newspaper, west, coast, founded, weekly, thomas, dry. This article is about the newspaper For the 2011 film see The Oregonian film For other uses see Oregonian The Oregonian is a daily newspaper based in Portland Oregon United States owned by Advance Publications It is the oldest continuously published newspaper on the U S West Coast 7 founded as a weekly by Thomas J Dryer on December 4 1850 and published daily since 1861 It is the largest newspaper in Oregon and the second largest in the Pacific Northwest by circulation It is one of the few newspapers with a statewide focus in the United States 7 8 The Sunday edition is published under the title The Sunday Oregonian The regular edition was published under the title The Morning Oregonian from 1861 until 1937 9 The OregonianTypeDaily newspaperFormatTabloid since April 2 2014 Owner s Advance Publications 1 PublisherOregonian Media Group 2 3 EditorTherese Bottomly 4 Staff writers288 75 full time part time 5 Founded1850Headquarters1500 S W First Avenue 6 Portland Oregon 97201 United StatesCirculationSunday 156 184 Saturday 77 035 Wed and Fri 91 827ISSN8750 1317Websitewww OregonLive comThe Oregonian received the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service the only gold medal annually awarded by the organization 10 The paper s staff or individual writers have received seven other Pulitzer Prizes most recently the award for Editorial Writing in 2014 11 The Oregonian is home delivered throughout Multnomah Washington Clackamas and Yamhill counties in Oregon and Clark County Washington four days a week Wednesday Friday Saturday and Sunday it is also home delivered in parts of Marion and Columbia counties 12 Although some independent dealers do deliver the newspaper outside that area in 2006 it ceased to be available in far Eastern Oregon and the southern Oregon Coast and starting in December 2008 increasing newsprint and distribution costs caused the paper to stop delivery to all areas south of Albany 13 Contents 1 History 1 1 Establishment 1 1 1 First weekly issues 1 2 1860s 1870s 1 2 1 Pittock era 1 2 2 Scott era 1 3 1880s 1890s 1 3 1 Sunday Oregonian 1 3 2 New location 1 4 1900s 1940s 1 4 1 The Morning Oregonian and KGW 1 4 2 Move in 1948 1 5 1950s 1960s 1 5 1 The Oregon Journal 1 6 Late 1960s early 1980s 1 7 1985 1 8 Late 1980s 1 8 1 Hilliard era 1 8 2 1989 1 9 1990s 1 9 1 Rowe era 1 10 Pulitzer Prize 1 11 2000s 1 11 1 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service 1 11 2 2004 criticism 1 11 3 2005 2006 1 11 4 2007 1 11 5 2008 1 11 6 2009 1 12 2010s 1 12 1 2013 1 12 2 2014 2015 1 12 3 2016 1 12 4 2018 1 12 5 2020 1 12 5 1 Comments section elimination 1 12 5 2 Paywall 2 Targeted publications 3 Website 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory Edit Ramage press used to print the first Oregonian First steam press used by the Oregonian installed in 1862 more than a year after the advent of a daily edition and used until 1871 Subsequently used by the Hillsboro Argus until at least 1911 14 Establishment Edit One year prior to the incorporation of the tiny town of Portland Oregon in 1851 prospective leaders of the new community determined to establish a local newspaper an institution which was seen as a prerequisite for urban growth 15 Chief among these pioneer community organizers seeking establishment of a Portland press were Col W W Chapman and prominent local businessman Henry W Corbett 15 In the fall of 1850 Chapman and Corbett traveled to San Francisco at the time far and away the largest city on the west coast of the United States in search of an editor interested in and capable of producing a weekly newspaper in Portland 15 There the pair met Thomas J Dryer a transplanted New Yorker who was an energetic writer with both printing equipment and previous experience in the production of a small circulation community newspaper in his native Ulster County New York 15 First weekly issues Edit The Weekly Oregonian front page on March 19 1859 Dryer s press was transported to Portland and it was there on December 4 1850 that the first issue of The Weekly Oregonian found its readers 16 Each weekly issue consisted of four pages printed six columns wide 16 Little attention was paid to current news events with the bulk of the paper s content devoted to political themes and biographical commentary 16 The paper took a staunch political line supportive of the Whig Party an orientation which soon brought it into conflict with The Statesman a Democratic paper launched at Oregon City not long after The Weekly Oregonian s debut 16 A loud and bitter rivalry between the competing news organs ensued 16 1860s 1870s Edit Pittock era Edit Henry Pittock became the owner in 1861 as compensation for unpaid wages and he began publishing the paper daily except Sundays 17 Pittock s goal was to focus more on news than the bully pulpit established by Dryer 18 He ordered a new press in December 1860 and also arranged for the news to be sent by telegraph to Redding California then by stagecoach to Jacksonville Oregon and then by pony express to Portland 18 Scott era Edit Harvey W Scott as he appeared in the 1870s From 1866 to 1872 Harvey W Scott was the editor 19 Henry W Corbett bought the paper from a cash poor Pittock in October 1872 and placed William Lair Hill as editor 18 Scott fired by Corbett for supporting Ben Holladay s candidates became editor of Holladay s rival Portland Daily Bulletin 18 The paper went out of print in 1876 Holladay having lost 200 000 in the process 18 Corbett sold The Oregonian back to Pittock in 1877 marking a return of Scott to the paper s editorial helm 18 A part owner of the paper Scott would remain as editor in chief until shortly before his death in 1910 20 1880s 1890s Edit One of the journalists who began his career on The Oregonian during this time period was James J Montague who took over and wrote the column Slings amp Arrows until he was hired away by William Randolph Hearst in 1902 21 In this time period Governor Sylvester Pennoyer prominently criticized the Oregonian for calling for vigilante justice against Chinese Americans Pennoyer favored running people of Chinese descent out of the state by legal means 22 The West Shore criticized the Oregonian for its sensationalized coverage of the English monarchy 23 Sunday Oregonian Edit In 1881 the first Sunday Oregonian was published 24 The paper became known as the voice of business oriented Republicans as evidenced by consistent endorsement of Republican candidates for president in every federal election before 1992 New location Edit The Oregonian Building of 1892 was the paper s home until 1948 It was demolished in 1950 The paper s offices and presses were originally housed in a two story building at the intersection of First Street now First Avenue and Morrison Street but in 1892 the paper moved into a new nine story building at 6th and Alder streets 24 The new building was the same as its predecessor and successor called the Oregonian Building It included a clock tower at one corner and the building s overall height of 194 25 to 196 26 feet around 59 m made it the tallest structure in Portland a distinction it retained until the completion of the Yeon Building in 1911 26 It contained about 100 000 square feet 9 300 m2 of floor space including the basement but not the tower 25 The newspaper did not move again until 1948 The 1892 building was demolished in 1950 27 1900s 1940s Edit See also Ben Hur Lampman The Morning Oregonian January 22 1912 Following the death of Harvey Scott in 1910 the paper s editor in chief was Edgar B Piper who had previously been managing editor 28 Piper remained editor until his death in 1928 The Oregonian s first female journalist Louise Bryant joined the paper around 1909 29 The Morning Oregonian and KGW Edit In 1922 the Oregonian discontinued its weekly edition 30 and launched KGW Oregon s first commercial radio station Five years later KGW affiliated with NBC 1927 The newspaper purchased a second station KEX in 1933 31 from NBC subsidiary Northwest Broadcasting Co In 1944 KEX was sold to Westinghouse Radio Stations Inc The Oregonian launched KGW FM the Northwest s first FM station 32 in 1946 acclaimed by The Oregonian May 8 1946 known today as KKRZ KGW and KGW FM were sold to King Broadcasting Co in 1953 In 1937 The Morning Oregonian shortened its name to The Oregonian Two years later associate editor Ronald G Callvert received a Pulitzer Prize for editorial reporting for distinguished editorial writing as exemplified by the editorial entitled My Country Tis of Thee 33 A 20 year trust under which the Oregonian was conducted expired in 1939 O L Price who managed the newspaper under the trust retired at age 61 upon its expiration Ownership reverted to the heirs of Pittock and H W Scott 34 Move in 1948 Edit Postcard of the new home of The Oregonian corner of 6th amp Jefferson In 1948 the paper moved to a new location within downtown where its headquarters ultimately would remain for the next 66 years on SW Broadway between Jefferson Street and Columbia Street The new building was designed by Pietro Belluschi and again was named the Oregonian Building 24 The block was previously home to the William S Ladd mansion which had been demolished around 1925 18 Circa 1946 The Oregonian purchased the block for 100 000 which led to complaints from paper editor Leslie M Scott because of the outrageous price 18 Three years later Scott purchased a nearby block for the state at 300 000 while holding the office of Oregon State Treasurer 18 The new Oregonian building was to contain the KGW radio station and a television studio as well as a large and opulent dining room 18 The contractor was L H Hoffman who was under a very profitable cost plus contract 18 Aside from the extravagance of design construction materials in short supply the nation was under heavy inflation and Belluschi s plans were never ready leading to massive costs 18 The Oregonian had to borrow from banks the first time in over 50 years 18 New company president E B MacNaughton was forced to exhaust the company s loan limits at First National Bank then turn to the Bank of America 18 MacNaughton then eliminated an extra elevator the dining room and KGW s radio and television studios 18 The building still cost 4 million twice the original estimate 18 The building opened in 1948 but The Oregonian had to sell it to Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company for 3 6 million in a leaseback arrangement 18 Further financial issues led to the 1950 sale to Samuel Newhouse 18 1950s 1960s Edit In 1950 Advance Publications founder S I Si Newhouse purchased the paper 35 At that time the sale price of 5 6 million was the largest for a single newspaper 36 The sale was announced on December 11 1950 18 In 1954 Newhouse bought 50 of Mount Hood Radio amp Television Broadcasting Corp which broadcasts KOIN TV Portland s first VHF television station KOIN AM now KUFO and KOIN FM now KXL FM The Oregonian s circulation in 1950 was 214 916 that of the rival Oregon Journal was 190 844 37 In 1957 staff writers William Lambert and Wallace Turner were awarded that year s Pulitzer Prize for Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting No Edition time 38 Their prize cited their expose of vice and corruption in Portland involving some municipal officials and officers of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters Chauffeurs Warehousemen and Helpers of America Western Conference and noted that they fulfilled their assignments despite great handicaps and the risk of reprisal from lawless elements 38 The Oregon Journal Edit What was to become a long and heated strike began against both The Oregonian and The Oregon Journal began in November 1959 39 The strike was called by Stereotypers Local 49 over various contract issues particularly the introduction of more automated plate casting machinery 40 the new to American publishing German made equipment required one operator instead of the four that operated the existing equipment 39 Wallace Turner and many other writers and photographers refused to cross the picket lines and never returned 41 The two newspapers published a joint typo marred paper for six months until they had hired enough nonunion help to resume separate operations 40 Starting in February 1960 striking union workers published a daily newspaper The Portland Reporter 7 its circulation peaked at 78 000 but was shut down in October 1964 42 In 1961 Newhouse bought The Oregon Journal Portland s afternoon daily newspaper 43 Production and business operations of the two newspapers were consolidated in The Oregonian s building while their editorial staffs remained separate 44 The National Labor Relations Board ruled the strike illegal in November 1963 7 Strikers continued to picket until April 4 1965 41 at which point the two newspapers became open shops Late 1960s early 1980s Edit In 1967 Fred Stickel came to The Oregonian from New Jersey to become general manager of the paper he became president in 1972 and publisher in 1975 45 As part of a larger corporate plan to exit broadcasting The Oregonian sold KOIN TV to newspaper owner Lee Enterprises in 1977 46 At the same time KOIN AM and FM were sold to Gaylord Broadcasting Co Since S I Newhouse died in 1979 S I Jr has managed the magazines and Donald oversees the newspapers The Oregonian lost its primary competitor and Portland became a one daily newspaper city in 1982 when Advance Newhouse shut down the Journal citing declining advertising revenues citation needed 1985 Edit The Oregonian published a twenty part series on the Rajneeshpuram a religious community that established itself in Antelope Oregon 47 Late 1980s Edit Hilliard era Edit William A Hilliard was named editor in 1987 and was the paper s first African American editor 48 A resident of Oregon since the age of 8 Hilliard had already worked at The Oregonian for 35 years he had been city editor starting in 1971 and executive editor since 1982 49 1989 Edit The Oregonian established an Asia bureau in Tokyo Japan in 1989 50 Also in 1989 The Oregonian endorsed a Democratic candidate for president for the first time in its history when it supported Bill Clinton in 1992 51 1990s Edit The year 1993 was an eventful year for The Oregonian Robert M Landauer then editorial page editor was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Editorial Writing for a bold campaign to defuse myths and prejudice promoted by an anti homosexual constitutional amendment which was subsequently defeated according to the Pulitzer judges The integrity of The Oregonian became the subject of national coverage when The Washington Post broke the story of inappropriate sexual advances which led to the resignation of Oregon senator Bob Packwood four years later This prompted some to joke If it matters to Oregonians it s in the Washington Post a twist on the Oregonian s slogan If it matters to Oregonians it s in The Oregonian 52 Finally Newhouse appointed a new editor for the paper Sandra Rowe who relocated from The Virginian Pilot 53 Business has everything power influence sex drama and our job is to pull back the curtain That bank merger last week Who got screwed Who came out on top This is what really happened Business news should be handled as finely crafted drama it s got substance and great meaning Business should be the backbone of the newspaper Sandy Rowe from AJR in 1999 54 Rowe era Edit Sandra Rowe joined the paper as executive editor in June 1993 55 She formally became editor in 1994 with the retirement of William Hilliard but Hilliard had effectively already given her control of the editor s reins in 1993 as he focused his attention on his duties as the newly elected president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors for 1993 94 in his final year before retirement 49 According to Editor amp Publisher soon after Rowe s arrival she introduced organizational changes to the newsroom Instead of having a large number of general assignment reporters she organized them around teams many of which often develop subject expertise that reflect s the interests of readers not traditional newsroom boundaries 5 Examples over the years include Northwest Issues and Environment Living In the 90s How We Live Politics and Accountability Health Science and Medicine Sustainability and Growth and Higher Education 5 56 Accompanying the reorganization was a more bottom up approach to identifying stories instead of having an assignment driven newspaper you have the beat reporters coming to editors with what is going on with the team editors responsible for deciding what stories were covered by their teams 5 The position of public editor was established at The Oregonian in 1993 and Robert Caldwell was appointed 57 Michele McLellan assumed the role three years later and was delegated the authority to decide whether or not a newspaper error should result in the publication of a correction 58 Pulitzer Prize Edit Staff writer Richard Read won the 1999 Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting for a series The French Fry Connection 59 The articles illustrated the impact of the 1997 Asian financial crisis by following a case of french fries from a Washington state farm to a McDonald s in Singapore ending in Indonesia during riots that led to the Fall of Suharto The newsroom celebrated The Oregonian s first Pulitzer in 42 years with champagne McDonald s french fries and a brass band The series also received the Overseas Press Club award for best business reporting from abroad the Scripps Howard Foundation award for business reporting and the Blethen award for enterprise reporting 60 61 Co worker Tom Hallman Jr was a finalist for the 1999 Pulitzer Prize in Feature Writing for his unique profile of a man struggling to recover from a brain injury Reporter Mark O Keefe won an Overseas Press Club award for human rights reporting The editors of Columbia Journalism Review recognized The Oregonian as number twelve on its list of America s Best Newspapers and the best newspaper owned by the Newhouse family 2000s Edit In 2000 The Oregonian was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Reporting for its coverage of an environmental disaster created when the New Carissa a freighter that carried nearly 400 000 gallons of heavy fuel ran aground February 4 1999 north of Coos Bay Oregon The articles detailed how fumbling efforts of official agencies failed to contain the far reaching damage according to the Pulitzer jury That same year reporters Brent Walth 62 and Alex Pulaski 63 were finalists for the Pulitzer Prize in Explanatory Writing for their series on political influences in pesticide regulation Pulitzer Prize for Public Service Edit The Oregonian and news staff were acknowledged with two Pulitzer Prizes in 2001 The paper was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service 64 for its detailed and unflinching examination of systematic problems within the U S Immigration and Naturalization Service including harsh treatment of foreign nationals and other widespread abuses which prompted various reforms The series was reported and written by Kim Christensen 65 Richard Read Julie Sullivan Springhetti 66 and Brent Walth 62 with editorials by the editorial board Staff writer Tom Hallman Jr received the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for Feature Writing 67 for his series The Boy Behind the Mask on a teen with a facial deformity In 2003 music critic David Stabler was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Feature Writing for his sensitive sometimes surprising chronicle of a teenage prodigy s struggle with a musical talent that proved to be both a gift and a problem Michael Arrieta Walden became public editor in 2003 when he ended his three year term in the position no successor was named 68 The Oregonian Building of 1948 which occupies a full city block in downtown Portland housed the paper s headquarters from 1948 to 2014 2004 criticism Edit In 2004 the paper faced criticism after a headline characterized a 1970s sexual relationship between then mayor Neil Goldschmidt and a 14 year old girl as an affair rather than statutory rape 69 70 71 The paper endorsed a Democrat for president for the second time in its 150 year history when it backed John Kerry for president in 2004 51 2005 2006 Edit In 2005 staff reporters Steve Suo and Erin Hoover Barnett were finalists for the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting for their groundbreaking reports on the failure to curtail the growing illicit use of methamphetamines That same year Americans United for Palestinian Human Rights published two reports on The Oregonian claiming the paper under reported Palestinian deaths in its news stories of the Israeli Palestinian conflict and excluded the Palestinian narrative in its Opinion Pages 72 73 Editorial writers Doug Bates and Rick Attig were awarded the 2006 Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing for their editorials on the conditions at the Oregon State Hospital 74 As of late 2006 and early 2007 the paper s circulation averaged 319 625 for the daily edition and 375 913 for the Sunday edition giving The Oregonian the 22nd largest circulation among all major newspapers in the U S 75 2007 Edit In 2007 The Oregonian and its journalists were recognized with several awards Sports columnist John Canzano was selected as the nation s No 2 sports columnist in the annual Associated Press Sports Editors Awards Three Oregonian reporters Jeff Kosseff Bryan Denson and Les Zaitz were awarded the George Polk Award for national reporting for their series about the failure of a decades old multibillion dollar federal program established by the Javits Wagner O Day Act intended to help people with severe disabilities find employment Instead it awarded executives handsomely but left disabled workers in segregated jobs often paying less than minimum wage 76 77 On April 16 2007 it was announced that the staff of The Oregonian was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Reporting for their skillful and tenacious coverage of a family missing in the Oregon mountains telling the tragic story both in print and online 78 In addition the paper s reporters were finalists in two other categories Les Zaitz Jeff Kosseff and Bryan Denson were finalists for the Pulitzer for National Reporting for the same series that also won the George Polk Award noted above Inara Verzemnieks was nominated for the Pulitzer for Feature Writing for her witty and perceptive portfolio of features on an array of everyday topics according to the Pulitzer judges 2008 Edit In February 2008 Editor amp Publisher named editor Sandra Mims Rowe and executive editor Peter Bhatia as Editors of the Year The trade journal noted that since Rowe and Bhatia arrived in 1993 the paper and its journalists had won five Pulitzer Prizes and had been finalists a further nine times 5 E amp P also cited an increased focus on specialized reporting a reorganized newsroom that promotes team reporting concepts over traditional beats and regular training sessions and seminars that most staffers credit for encouraging fresh ideas and competitive approaches 5 Pulitzer Board member Richard Oppel the editor of the Austin American Statesman called the paper one of the finest newspapers in the country easily in the top 10 5 On September 28 2008 the paper distributed a DVD of Obsession Radical Islam s War Against the West as an advertising supplement for that day s edition 79 two weeks after The New York Times The Charlotte Observer and The Miami Herald had done the same thing 80 The Oregonian did so despite Portland mayor Tom Potter s personal request that publisher Fred Stickel not distribute it because the tenor of the video contributes towards a climate of distrust towards Muslims and because the paper s willingness to distribute the DVD bestows upon it an impression of objectivity and legitimacy it does not deserve 79 Stickel cited freedom of speech and an obligation to keep our advertising columns as open as possible as reasons for not rejecting the DVD 79 Newsroom staff in 2008 was about the same size as it was in 1993 though there were fifty fewer full time staff members than there were in 2002 about half of those positions were eliminated after a buyout in late 2007 5 The paper s outside news bureaus grew from four to six during her tenure 5 2009 Edit In 2009 The Oregonian was scooped for a third time on a story of an Oregon politician s sex scandal this time involving Mayor Sam Adams about what Newsweek called his public deception and private bad judgment about his past relationship with a teenage legislative intern 81 Nigel Jaquiss of Willamette Week broke the story after 18 months of investigations Jaquiss s reporting on another sex scandal involving Neil Goldschmidt earned Jaquiss a 2005 Pulitzer Prize Jaquiss thinks The Oregonian s failure to follow up on leads that both he and Oregonian reporters had received was a case of one newspaper towns being a little too cozy with local power brokers 81 A media ethics teacher and consultant for The Poynter Institute for Media Studies suggests that the pattern of failure to cover such stories may have more to do with the culture at The Oregonian which has recently built its reputation on thoughtful narrative coverage that doesn t lend itself well to digging up sex scandals 81 In August 2009 the paper s owners announced the end of a policy that protected full time employees from layoffs for economic or technological reasons 45 the change took effect the following February 82 In September 2009 publisher Fred Stickel announced his retirement effective September 18 ending 34 years in the position his son Patrick president of the paper was appointed interim publisher but was not a candidate to succeed his father 45 and Patrick Stickel retired on December 30 2009 83 N Christian Anderson III was named as the new publisher in October 84 and began work in the position at the beginning of November 2009 85 After more than 16 years as editor Sandra Rowe retired at the end of 2009 86 87 Peter Bhatia then executive editor succeeded her as editor 86 2010s Edit Layoffs of 37 in February 2010 left the paper with a total of about 750 employees including more than 200 in the news department 82 In September the newspaper announced that its TV Click was to be replaced by TV Weekly a publication from the Troy Michigan based NTVB Media 88 Unlike TV Click TV Weekly requires a separate subscription fee The Oregonian is following the example of the Houston Chronicle 89 and other major newspapers and switching to some form of opt in and pay TV sections rather than dropping the sections and have found only about 10 percent to 20 percent of subscribers use the sections 88 2013 Edit In 2013 publisher N Christian Anderson announced the paper was restructuring and that beginning October 1 the Oregonian Publishing Company would be dissolved 1 Two new companies would be formed the Oregonian Media Group which will focus on providing content on its online news site OregonLive com though it would continue to publish a daily print edition of the paper and Advance Central Services Oregon which would provide production packaging and distribution support for the new company Ownership remained with Advance Publications Though the paper would be printed seven days a week home delivery would be cut to four days a week Wednesday Friday Saturday and Sunday 1 These changes were put into effect as scheduled on October 1 90 The paper also announced that significant layoffs were expected 1 In addition Anderson announced that the new company would likely move from its downtown Portland building 91 2014 2015 Edit A newly redesigned and installed street vending box for The Oregonian black after the paper became a tabloid on April 2 2014 along with a Portland Tribune box green The paper s longtime printing plant in the Goose Hollow neighborhood west of downtown closed in 2015 after the paper s printing was outsourced The smaller of the complex s two buildings pictured was demolished in late 2018 On April 2 2014 the paper switched from broadsheet format to the smaller tabloid format 92 On April 14 2014 it was announced that the paper s editorial staff consisting of Mark Hester Erik Lukens Susan Nielsen and Len Reed 93 had won the 2014 Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing for their coverage of the state of Oregon s public employee retirement system Reporter Les Zaitz was named as a finalist for Explanatory Reporting for his work on Mexican drug cartels 11 Editor Peter Bhatia left the paper in May 2014 to take a teaching position at Arizona State University In July 2014 it was announced that Mark Katches had been hired as the paper s editor and would also be the Oregonian Media Group s vice president of content 94 Also in July 2014 the newspaper moved its headquarters from the building at 1320 SW Broadway that it had occupied since 1948 to a smaller space elsewhere in downtown Portland 95 The new headquarters takes up around 40 000 sq ft 3 700 m2 of space in the Crown Plaza office building at 1500 SW First Avenue 6 N Christian Anderson left the Oregonian Media Group in May 2015 to become editor and publisher of The Register Guard in Eugene Oregon 96 Anderson became publisher of The Oregonian in 2009 subsequently being named president of the Oregonian Media Group when that new company replaced the Oregonian Publishing Company in October 2013 with the title of publisher thereafter no longer being used and in turn was appointed to the new position of chairman of the group in September 2014 96 Steve Moss succeeded Anderson as Oregonian Media Group president 97 and the chairman position was to go unfilled 96 In June 2015 Advance signed a contract with Signature Graphics to take over printing and distribution of the paper from Advance Central Services Oregon and announced that it was considering selling its longtime printing plant located near Providence Park 98 99 Layoffs of printing press workers were due to be implemented in August 99 In February 2017 the Oregonian Publishing Company sold the 41 000 square foot 3 800 m2 building for 20 million to a development partnership which said it planned to tear it down and build a 23 story apartment building on the site 100 now known as the Press Blocks 101 Demolition of the former printing complex began in fall 2018 102 103 2016 Edit Moss announced in July 2016 that he would depart at the end of August 104 In the article about Moss s impending departure it was disclosed that the newspaper s Sunday circulation was at that time approximately 170 000 104 On October 24 2016 the paper s editorial board announced that it would once again decline to endorse a candidate for President of the United States a practice it first abandoned in 2012 This decision was criticized by some readers who wondered why the board would offer endorsements in state elections without also taking a position on the presidential race The board justified its decision by citing the paper s general focus on local issues writing Our goal as an editorial board is to have an impact in our community And we don t think an endorsement for president would move the needle So that s why we focus our endorsement energy where voters may not have made up their minds and need help with the decision 105 2018 Edit Editor Mark Katches left the company in August 2018 to become editor of the Tampa Bay Times owned by the non profit Poynter Institute for Media Studies Therese Bottomly who had worked The Oregoniansince 1983 was named editor and vice president of content in September 2018 4 106 2020 Edit Comments section elimination Edit On January 2 2020 The Oregonian eliminated the comments section of Oregonlive com The paper said it was following the trend of other papers in the past decade and said most readers don t utilize the comments feature The paper also said uncivil comments were taking up too many resources to moderate 107 Paywall Edit In mid June 2020 the paper started rolling out stories tagged Exclusive marking the announcement of upcoming paywall 108 These exclusive contents usually front page stories were made subscribers only partway through July and starting on July 27 2020 it has been switched over to paywall and restricted to paid subscribers only 109 Targeted publications EditThe staff of The Oregonian also produces three targeted publications glossy magazines distributed free of charge to 40 000 45 000 wealthy residents of the Portland metropolitan area and sold on newsstands to 5 000 others A fourth glossy magazine Explore the Pearl is produced in conjunction with the Pearl District Business Association and mailed to high income Portland Metro households within Lake Oswego West Linn Mountain Park Lakeridge Forest Heights Raleigh Hills Oak Hills West Hills Dunthorpe and Clark County 110 Magazine Description Copiesdelivered Targethousehold income WebsiteExplore the Pearl A look at all of the hot spots retailers restaurants and galleries the Pearl has to offer 110 61 000 110 www explorethepearl comHomes Gardens Northwest Take s you inside real Northwest homes and gardens where residents and professionals have created spaces perfect for the finest Northwest living 111 40 000 111 120 000 median 111 hgnorthwest comMix Celebrates our fascination with fine food and the casual entertaining that marks the Northwest lifestyle 112 40 000 112 95 000 median 112 mixpdx comUltimateNorthwest Captures the experience of living the good life here in Oregon and the Northwest 113 45 000 113 164 000 average 113 Website EditOregonLive comTypeWebsiteFormatWeb portalOwner s Advance Publications 114 PublisherOregonian Media Group 115 116 EditorTherese Bottomly Editor and vice president of content 4 Staff writers9 26 editorial marketing citation needed Founded1997Headquarters921 SW WashingtonPortland Oregon 97205United StatesWebsiteOregonLive comOregonLive com is a website covering local news in Oregon and Southwest Washington 117 The website serves as the online home of The Oregonian 5 Started in 1997 it is owned by Advance Publications which also owns The Oregonian 118 Betsy Richter was the original editor of the website and served through 1998 when Kevin Cosgrove took over as editor in chief 118 Oregonian Media Group also publishes the website Here is Oregon 119 In addition to content from the affiliated newspapers OregonLive also uses content from the Associated Press 118 See also EditThe Oregonian Printing Press ParkPortals Oregon JournalismReferences Edit a b c d Hunsberger Brett June 20 2013 The Oregonian will go to four day home delivery The Oregonian Retrieved October 6 2013 About Oregonian Media Group FAQ OregonLive com June 20 2013 Retrieved February 16 2019 About Oregonian Media Group Oregonian Media Group Archived from the original on November 12 2017 Retrieved November 23 2017 a b c Manning Jeff September 8 2018 online date September 7 Therese Bottomly named editor The Oregonian p A2 Retrieved October 18 2018 a b c d e f g h i j Editors of the Year 2008 Sandy Rowe amp Peter Bhatia Editor amp Publisher February 2008 Archived from the original on September 6 2014 Retrieved January 20 2012 a b Njus Elliott July 24 2014 Oregonian Media Group to move into new downtown offices The Oregonian Retrieved September 12 2014 a b c d Heinzkill Richard August 1993 A Brief History of Newspaper Publishing in Oregon University of Oregon Libraries Retrieved November 22 2006 Our History Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association Retrieved February 16 2019 Morning Oregonian Portland Or 1861 1937 Historic Oregon Newspapers University of Oregon Retrieved December 4 2018 The Oregonian and the Pulitzer Prize OregonLive January 10 2019 Archived from the original on August 16 2021 Retrieved August 16 2021 a b The 2014 Pulitzer Prize Winners Editorial Writing April 14 2014 Retrieved April 14 2014 Get The Oregonian Delivered To Your Home Or Business The Oregonian Retrieved February 16 2009 Oregonian to halt delivery in Eugene Springfield area The Register Guard Eugene Ore December 13 2008 p B1 First presses used by the Oregonian still exist The Oregonian February 4 1911 a b c d H W Scott History of Portland Oregon With Illustrations and Biographical Sketches of Prominent Citizens and Pioneers Syracuse NY D Mason amp Co 1890 pg 413 a b c d e Scott History of Portland Oregon pg 414 Scott H W 1890 The Press History of Portland Oregon Syracuse New York D Mason amp Co OCLC 14569544 Retrieved December 23 2006 via AccessGenealogy com a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s MacColl E Kimbark 1979 The Growth of a City Power and Politics in Portland Oregon 1915 1950 Portland Oregon The Georgian Press ISBN 0 9603408 1 5 Notson Robert C Making the Day Begin Oregonian Publishing Company 1976 p 8 Nash Lee April 7 2021 Harvey Scott 1838 1910 The Oregon Encyclopedia Archived from the original on August 16 2021 Retrieved August 16 2021 James J Montague collected papers Ithaca New York Pennoyer s Letter The Famous Anti Chinese Letter Read Read Read The Eugene City Guard May 22 1886 Front page The Duty of a True Journalist editorial West Shore December 1 1886 p 395 a b c Notson Robert C December 6 1981 100 Years of Sunday Reading The Sunday Oregonian pp NW4 NW11 a b Oregonian Building Said Most Fireproof On Coast Ahead of Its Time When Built October 5 1947 The Sunday Oregonian p 16 a b Yeon Skyscraper Starts March 10 February 6 1910 The Sunday Oregonian Section 4 p 12 Building Gone From Old Site November 19 1950 The Sunday Oregonian p 18 Henry L Pittock Leader in Pacific Coast Journalism Dies at Age of 83 Editor amp Publisher February 1 1919 pp 7 8 Chandler J D 2016 Murder amp scandal in prohibition Portland sex vice amp misdeeds in Mayor Baker s reign Charleston SC The History Press p 41 ISBN 978 1 4671 1953 5 OCLC 928581539 Weekly Oregonian is Discontinued Oregon Exchanges April 1922 Oregonian Acquires Radio Station KEX September 1 1933 The Morning Oregonian p 1 Notson Robert C Making the Day Begin Oregonian Publishing Company 1976 p 22 The Pulitzer Prizes 1939 Winners Retrieved April 3 2009 Paper Reverts to Heirs The New York Times January 29 1939 p 20 Newhouse family Encyclopaedia Britannica October 1 2017 Archived from the original on August 16 2021 Retrieved August 16 2021 Notson Robert C Making the Day Begin Oregonian Publishing Company 1976 p 27 The Press Snap the Whip Time magazine January 23 1950 Archived from the original on January 31 2011 a b The Pulitzer Prizes 1957 Winners Retrieved April 3 2009 a b Klare Gene November 1 2002 Let me say this about that Northwest Labor Press Archived from the original on September 6 2003 Retrieved September 13 2010 a b The Press Portland How Good Is a Strike Time March 8 1963 Archived from the original on February 4 2013 Retrieved September 13 2010 a b Babb Doug June 21 2010 1959 1965 Portland s Newspaper Strike Conkling Fiskum amp McCormick Retrieved September 13 2010 dead link Diehl Caleb November 23 2015 The Portland Newspaper Wars of the 1960s Portland Monthly Retrieved August 16 2021 Butts Jeannette January 29 2017 Portland s Newspaper Wars How The Oregonian became a Monopoly Public History PDX Retrieved August 16 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Notson Robert C Making the Day Begin Oregonian Publishing Company 1976 p 51 a b c At 87 Oregonian Publisher Stickel to Retire Editor amp Publisher Associated Press September 10 2009 Archived from the original on May 1 2011 Retrieved September 11 2009 KOIN TV PdxHistory com October 24 2016 Retrieved August 16 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Butler Grant March 21 2018 Read The Oregonian s original 20 part investigative series on Rajneeshees oregonlive Retrieved January 14 2022 Sarasohn David William A Hilliard 1927 The Oregon Encyclopedia Retrieved May 14 2012 a b Hallman Tom Jr May 15 1994 William A Hilliard Editor Emeritus The Oregonian p L1 Lynne Palombo December 3 2015 Throwback Thursday Happy 165th birthday Oregonian oregonlive Retrieved September 30 2020 a b The 1992 Campaign Newspapers Publish Endorsements The New York Times October 19 1992 Retrieved November 22 2006 Koberstein Paul 1999 Dubious Achievements The Oregonian 1974 1999 The Oregonian s Big Oh s Willamette Week Archived from the original on May 2 2007 Retrieved June 15 2007 Lisheron Mark March 2000 Riding High American Journalism Review Retrieved August 16 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Simons Lewis M November 1999 Continuation of Follow the Money American Journalism Review Retrieved March 17 2008 Nicholas Jonathan June 15 1993 Some like it hot and this newspaper s getting warmer The Oregonian p D1 Newsroom Roster Archived March 16 2008 at the Wayback Machine from the paper s website Robert Caldwell Editorial Page Editor Archived February 26 2008 at the Wayback Machine from the paper s website Details Matter Accuracy Archived April 23 2008 at the Wayback Machine a July 23 2002 article written by Michele McLellan for the Newspaper Credibility Handbook at the American Society of Newspaper Editors website Richard Read of The Oregonian Portland Pulitzer Prizes Foundation Announces National Journalism Awards Winners Archived from the original on December 31 2013 Times Reporters land swap series wins Blethen award a b Brent Walth School of Journalism and Communication Alex Pulaski Archived from the original on March 6 2016 Retrieved March 3 2016 The Oregonian Portland The Pulitzer Prizes Kim Christensen LA Times Los Angeles Times Julie Sullivan Springhetti July 27 2015 Tom Hallman Jr of The Oregonian Portland Pulitzer Prizes Arrieta Walden Michael March 26 2006 Thanks to all for sharing your wisdom The Oregonian Organization of News Ombudsmen Archived from the original on April 15 2007 Retrieved April 19 2007 Rosen Jill The Story Behind the Story American Journalism Review Archived from the original on November 11 2013 Retrieved November 22 2006 Jaquiss Nigel November 22 2006 The 30 Year Secret Willamette Week Retrieved November 22 2006 Vetter Christopher We are Dealing with a Child Molestor Inside Portland Archived from the original on November 25 2005 Retrieved November 22 2006 The Oregonian A News Coverage Report May October 2004 PDF Accuracy in Israel Palestine Reporting March 2005 Retrieved November 22 2006 Excluded Voices A study of Palestine Israel in the Opinion Pages of The Oregonian Newspaper PDF Americans United for Palestinian Human Rights March 21 2006 Retrieved November 22 2006 The Pulitzer Board Presents The Pulitzer Prize Winners 2006 Top 100 Daily Newspapers in the U S by Circulation 2007 PDF BurrellesLuce 2007 Retrieved July 31 2016 Polk Awards Announced Honor 8 Papers From New York To Oregon Editor amp Publisher February 2007 Archived from the original on May 1 2011 Retrieved February 20 2007 Long Island University Announces Winners of 2006 George Polk Awards Long Island University 2007 Retrieved February 20 2007 2007 Pulitzer Prize Winners BREAKING NEWS REPORTING Citation from the Pulitzer Prize website a b c E amp P Staff September 28 2008 Oregonian Distributes Muslim Terror DVD After Mayor Asks It to Refrain Editor amp Publisher Archived from the original on May 1 2011 Retrieved October 1 2008 Greg Mitchell Joe Strupp September 13 2008 Newspapers Deliver Millions of Terror DVDs to Subscribers In Swing States Editor amp Publisher Archived from the original on May 1 2011 Retrieved September 14 2008 a b c Winston Ross February 3 2009 The Paper Chase Newsweek Retrieved February 16 2009 a b Oregonian lays off 37 Portland Business Journal February 24 2010 Retrieved July 2 2010 Gunderson Laura December 30 2009 Patrick Stickel president of The Oregonian retires from paper The Oregonian Retrieved January 11 2010 Chris Anderson named The Oregonian s new publisher The Oregonian October 26 2009 Retrieved November 26 2009 Stern Henry November 4 2009 The Daily Show Can a new publisher reverse the slide at The Oregonian Willamette Week Retrieved November 26 2009 a b Oregonian Editor Rowe retiring Bhatia named successor Portland Business Journal December 7 2009 Retrieved July 2 2010 Bottomly Therese April 13 2010 ASNE honors former editor of The Oregonian Sandy Rowe The Oregonian Retrieved July 2 2010 a b In four weeks TV Click will be replaced by TV Weekly Questions and answers The Oregonian September 12 2010 Retrieved September 13 2010 The Chronicle Bids Adieu To The Free Weekly TV Section Houston Press April 12 2010 Retrieved September 13 2010 Bhatia Peter October 1 2013 Oregonian Media Group debuts with changes to The Oregonian OregonLive com The Oregonian Retrieved October 6 2013 Manning Rob June 20 2013 Q amp A Big Changes Coming For The Oregonian Oregon Public Broadcasting Retrieved June 21 2013 Giegerich Andy April 2 2014 Keeping tabs on the Oregonian s new format Portland Business Journal Retrieved April 3 2014 The 2014 Pulitzer Prize Winner in Editorial Writing The Pulitzer Prizes Retrieved June 23 2016 Mark Katches named new editor of The Oregonian and VP of Oregonian Media Group The Oregonian July 1 2014 Retrieved September 12 2014 Mesh Aaron July 25 2014 Two Veteran Staffers Are Leaving The Oregonian Willamette Week Retrieved September 12 2014 a b c Staff report May 5 2015 Chris Anderson leaving Oregonian Media Group for new role at The Register Guard The Oregonian Retrieved July 6 2015 Staff report March 19 2015 Steve Moss named president of Oregonian Media Group which includes The Oregonian OregonLive The Oregonian Retrieved July 6 2015 Advance Central Services Oregon will outsource printing of The Oregonian and will explore sale of existing print facility The Oregonian OregonLive June 30 2015 Retrieved October 13 2019 a b Mesh Aaron July 7 2015 Shop the Presses The Oregonian is selling its printing press and advancing deeper into the web Willamette Week Archived from the original on October 13 2019 Retrieved October 13 2019 Njus Elliot February 3 2017 Former Oregonian press site sold for 20 million The Oregonian OregonLive Retrieved October 13 2019 Bell Jon February 2 2017 Developers close 20M Press Blocks deal look to begin demo by year s end Portland Business Journal Retrieved October 13 2019 Njus Elliot October 5 2018 Seattle developer to start construction on Press Blocks office building The Oregonian OregonLive Retrieved October 13 2019 Tenney Sam November 6 2018 Redevelopment starts with demolition Daily Journal of Commerce Retrieved October 13 2019 a b Steve Moss stepping down as president of Oregonian Media Group The Oregonian July 25 2016 Retrieved July 31 2016 Laura Gunderson October 14 2016 Why we won t endorse a presidential candidate Editorial Endorsement 2016 OregonLive Retrieved 2017 12 25 Jaquiss Nigel September 7 2018 The Oregonian Names Therese Bottomly Its Top Editor Willamette Week Retrieved October 18 2018 Oregonian newspaper to end comments section on website Associated Press December 29 2019 Retrieved September 30 2020 Mesh Aaron June 21 2020 The Oregonian Is Launching Its Web Paywall Next Month Willamette Week Retrieved September 30 2020 Therese Bottomly July 26 2020 Letter from the Editor Exclusive stories reserved for subscribers starting Monday oregonlive Retrieved September 30 2020 a b c Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on April 30 2011 Retrieved September 11 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b c Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on June 25 2008 Retrieved May 1 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b c Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on June 25 2008 Retrieved May 1 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b c Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on June 25 2008 Retrieved May 1 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Hunsberger Brent June 20 2013 The Oregonian will go to four day home delivery OregonLive com Retrieved September 7 2019 Our Mission Oregonian Media Group Archived from the original on November 12 2017 Retrieved September 7 2019 About Oregonian Media Group FAQ OregonLive com June 20 2013 Retrieved September 7 2019 OREGONLIVE Oregonian Media Group Archived from the original on June 13 2017 Retrieved September 7 2019 a b c Earnshaw Aliza August 5 2001 Newspapering on the web remains tricky Portland Business Journal Archived from the original on June 15 2002 Retrieved May 4 2010 Main Page Here is Oregon Archived from the original on March 15 2023 Further reading Edit Oregon Biographies Thomas Jefferson Dryer Oregon History Project Oregon Historical Society 2002 External links Edit Media related to The Oregonian at Wikimedia Commons Official website The Oregonian The Oregon Encyclopedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Oregonian amp oldid 1151549018, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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